Where is the stress on 'sugata'? Is it an even stress with all short vowels , or is it sugāta with a long a like tathāgata, Mahāyāna and Vajrayāna? And how about the syllable stress on 'Chenrezig'? Unless a vowel is marked as long, I tend to have trouble putting the stress on the right syllable.

Worthy, wise and virtuous: Who is energetic and not indolent, in misfortune unshaken, flawless in manner and intelligent, such one will honor gain. - Digha Nikaya III 273

I was waiting to see if someone else would answer this one, but no-one has....

Regarding Sugata, I have heard it both ways, but more often with the stress on the su and the ga, but not on the ta. (if that makes sense) Just remember, though, in Sanskrit that a in the middle is a short a – सुगत not सुगात – so it's more like the u in butter, and less like the a in father.

My Tibetan is mediocre, but Chenrezig I have heard with virtually equally vowel stress, although the rig seemed to have slightly less stress, similar to Sugata.

(Tangentially, I'd love to read more about how the now redundant consonants modify vowels in Tibetan; it reminds me of Gaelig here in Scotland; e.g. Chenrezig is སྤྱན་རས་གཟིགས་ – spyan ras gzigs.)

OK, thanks. Yes, it does make sense. It might be suh-guh-tuh. It could also be suh-guh-tuh, if that's what you meant about hearing it both ways. Suh-guh-tuh seems to have a better ring. It's so much easier when one can read devanagari.

Worthy, wise and virtuous: Who is energetic and not indolent, in misfortune unshaken, flawless in manner and intelligent, such one will honor gain. - Digha Nikaya III 273